More than 300 languages are spoken along this NYC street
PUBLISHED APRIL 18, 2022
QUEENS, NEW YORK
In this vibrant borough there is a street called Roosevelt Avenue that cuts a cross-section through some of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods on Earth. Spanish, Bengali, Punjabi, Mixtec, Seke, and Kuranko are among the hundreds of languages spoken here. Nepalese dumplings and Korean noodles, Mexican tortas and Colombian empanadas, Thai curries and spicy South Indian vindaloos are just some of the many food choices.
Passing from one block to the next—through neighborhoods including Elmhurst, Corona, and Jackson Heights—can feel like crossing continents. Plazas and parks are crowded with vendors selling tamales, atole, and large-kernel corn. Tibetan Buddhists, fluent in the Indigenous languages of the Himalayas, walk to worship in their red-and-orange robes. Bangladeshi curbside markets teem with overflowing crates of ginger, garlic and humongous jackfruits, picked out by people wearing saris and shalwar kameez.
Left: Dominique Little, Braxton Brewington, and Amahree Archie pose for a portrait. The group of friends from Texas came to Queens to see the US Open, held annually at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows Corona Park.
Right: Originally from Pondicherry, India, the Maricar family now lives in Queens. In this portrait are Fahira Maricar, her husband Abdul, and their three children, Afrah, Afeef, and Arham, held by his father.
Members of Singularity, a K-Pop group, pauses for a portrait while working on a music video in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. From left to right are Tenzin Dayab, Ahsan Tariq, and ZeLinLi.
Growing up in New York, my own family would come to Queens to watch World Cup matches in South American cafés, just as our abuelos would visit their trusted Argentine butcher for fresh cuts of meat, and our Bukharan Jewish neighbors would come to pray, and our Indian family friends would come shopping for amulets and syrup-drizzled sweets for celebrations, all within this same 10-square-mile stretch of city.
Roosevelt Avenue is a pulsing artery of commerce and life. The road itself is chaotic, dark, and loud. You know you’re on Roosevelt because the elevated 7 train runs overhead, the tracks draping it in slitted shadows, and when the 7 train thunders past, for a moment, the frenzied thoroughfare is consumed: older women look up from their pushcarts; chatting friends fall silent mid-speak; and children cover their ears.
Roosevelt Avenue at dawn, as seen from the elevated train tracks running above the street. A pulsing artery of commerce and life, Roosevelt Avenue cuts through migrant-rich Queens neighborhoods including Jackson Heights, Elmhurst, and Corona.
Above the storefronts, at the level of the train, are smaller brick offices with signs that reveal the more pressing needs of such a migrant-rich community: “Sherpa Employment Agency,” “Construction Safety Training,” “Irma Travel: Send Money and Shipments to Lima and Provinces.” Taped to the metal pilings and lampposts are hand-written listings with tear-off phone numbers, mainly in Spanish, advertising “rooms for rent,” “employment needed,” and “help wanted.”
Left: A taxi driver weaves his way through traffic on Roosevelt Avenue. Many people who live in this part of Queens are essential workers who can’t work from home. When the coronavirus first tore through New York City in the spring of 2020, this part of Queens became know...
Right: Segundo Tenemaza waits for the train to work in Jackson Heights. At dawn on the elevated platform above Roosevelt Avenue, people heading to work often cross paths with revelers on their way home from a night out dancing.
PUBLISHED APRIL 18, 2022
QUEENS, NEW YORK
In this vibrant borough there is a street called Roosevelt Avenue that cuts a cross-section through some of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods on Earth. Spanish, Bengali, Punjabi, Mixtec, Seke, and Kuranko are among the hundreds of languages spoken here. Nepalese dumplings and Korean noodles, Mexican tortas and Colombian empanadas, Thai curries and spicy South Indian vindaloos are just some of the many food choices.
Passing from one block to the next—through neighborhoods including Elmhurst, Corona, and Jackson Heights—can feel like crossing continents. Plazas and parks are crowded with vendors selling tamales, atole, and large-kernel corn. Tibetan Buddhists, fluent in the Indigenous languages of the Himalayas, walk to worship in their red-and-orange robes. Bangladeshi curbside markets teem with overflowing crates of ginger, garlic and humongous jackfruits, picked out by people wearing saris and shalwar kameez.
Left: Dominique Little, Braxton Brewington, and Amahree Archie pose for a portrait. The group of friends from Texas came to Queens to see the US Open, held annually at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows Corona Park.
Right: Originally from Pondicherry, India, the Maricar family now lives in Queens. In this portrait are Fahira Maricar, her husband Abdul, and their three children, Afrah, Afeef, and Arham, held by his father.
Members of Singularity, a K-Pop group, pauses for a portrait while working on a music video in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. From left to right are Tenzin Dayab, Ahsan Tariq, and ZeLinLi.
Growing up in New York, my own family would come to Queens to watch World Cup matches in South American cafés, just as our abuelos would visit their trusted Argentine butcher for fresh cuts of meat, and our Bukharan Jewish neighbors would come to pray, and our Indian family friends would come shopping for amulets and syrup-drizzled sweets for celebrations, all within this same 10-square-mile stretch of city.
Roosevelt Avenue is a pulsing artery of commerce and life. The road itself is chaotic, dark, and loud. You know you’re on Roosevelt because the elevated 7 train runs overhead, the tracks draping it in slitted shadows, and when the 7 train thunders past, for a moment, the frenzied thoroughfare is consumed: older women look up from their pushcarts; chatting friends fall silent mid-speak; and children cover their ears.
Roosevelt Avenue at dawn, as seen from the elevated train tracks running above the street. A pulsing artery of commerce and life, Roosevelt Avenue cuts through migrant-rich Queens neighborhoods including Jackson Heights, Elmhurst, and Corona.
Above the storefronts, at the level of the train, are smaller brick offices with signs that reveal the more pressing needs of such a migrant-rich community: “Sherpa Employment Agency,” “Construction Safety Training,” “Irma Travel: Send Money and Shipments to Lima and Provinces.” Taped to the metal pilings and lampposts are hand-written listings with tear-off phone numbers, mainly in Spanish, advertising “rooms for rent,” “employment needed,” and “help wanted.”
Left: A taxi driver weaves his way through traffic on Roosevelt Avenue. Many people who live in this part of Queens are essential workers who can’t work from home. When the coronavirus first tore through New York City in the spring of 2020, this part of Queens became know...
Right: Segundo Tenemaza waits for the train to work in Jackson Heights. At dawn on the elevated platform above Roosevelt Avenue, people heading to work often cross paths with revelers on their way home from a night out dancing.